For the study, researchers examined survey data on drinking habits
and demographic characteristics for 207,394 adults in Norway. During
an average follow-up of 17 years, 8,435 participants died of
cardiovascular disease.
Compared to the participants who drank less than once a month,
moderate drinkers who enjoyed alcoholic beverages two to three times
a week were 22 percent less likely to die of heart disease during
the study, researchers report in PLoS Medicine.
But money also mattered.
Among the most affluent people, moderate drinkers were 34 percent
less likely to die from heart disease. But among the poorest
participants in the study, the odds of death for moderate drinkers
were just 21 percent lower than for nondrinkers.
“We knew that the risk of alcohol-related hospitalizations and
deaths was higher among less affluent individuals on average,
despite that they in general drink less frequently,” said lead
author Eirik Degerud of the Norwegian Institute of Public Health in
Oslo.

“We now see that that the proposed benefit of alcohol on the risk of
cardiovascular disease is more pronounced among those more
affluent,” Degerud said by email. “But as there is no good reason
why, mechanistically, alcohol should be more `protective’ among
those with an affluent background, we suspect that it is their
affluent background that is the real reason behind the difference.”
Being poor also appeared to worsen the risks of heavy drinking.
Among the least affluent participants, individuals who had four to
seven cocktails a week were 42 percent more likely to die from heart
disease than infrequent imbibers. Heavy drinkers were also 70
percent more likely to die of a stroke and 49 percent more likely to
die from any cause.
Frequent binge drinking was also associated with a higher risk of
death from heart disease, but it wasn’t clear whether social class
influenced these odds.
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Researchers used just one measurement to reflect lifetime drinking
habits, even though alcohol consumption might change over time.
Even so, the results add to evidence that the risk of premature
death associated with poverty can be impacted by people’s drinking
habits, said Juergen Rehm, author of an accompanying editorial and a
researcher at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the
University of Toronto.
“The findings indicate that the effects of alcohol differ depending
on the socioeconomic position of the drinker,” Rehm said by email.
Affluent people shouldn’t think they can drink as much they like,
however.
“One key message is that there is no safe level of alcohol
consumption but that the risk differs based on other vulnerability
factors often linked to socioeconomic status,” Rehm added.
Beyond just cardiovascular health, there are other reasons to cut
back on alcohol, including an increased risk of certain cancers.
Based on this study and others, Rehm advised, “Less drinking is
better for health.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2E1RpFy PLoS Medicine, online January 2, 2018
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